On Friday, Match 7, Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton announced
charges filed against the 18-year-old just minutes before Parker's district court arraignment. In addition to second-degree murder, he is charged with manslaughter, operating a
vehicle while intoxicated causing death, reckless driving causing death,
operating while intoxicated causing serious injury, reckless driving causing
serious impairment of a body function, operating while intoxicated causing
serious injury and reckless driving causing serious impairment of a body function.

Genesee District Judge David J. Goggins set Parker's bond at
$240,000. Parker's preliminary examination was scheduled
for March 19.

Mariah Bailey-Collins, 36, was killed as she was heading to her
Mt. Morris Township home with her newlywed husband, Bryan, and her 11-year-old
son.

Their car was struck head-on at about 10:15 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 9,
by an Impala traveling south on northbound US-23 in Mundy Township, police
said.

Leyton said an investigation showed that Parker began drinking
from a half-gallon of Canadian House whiskey with several friends at roughly 5
p.m. on Feb. 9 at Boulder Creek Apartments in Burton. None were legally old
enough to purchase alcohol, Leyton said, but they purchased it from a
nearby store.

"Our information is that by 10 p.m. that the half-gallon was
mostly empty," Leyton said, adding the investigation showed Parker left in a
white Chevrolet Impala.

By 10:15 p.m., callers to 911 reported a head-on collision. Mundy Township Police Detective Mike Neering said an
initial report indicates Parker was traveling 62 mph, while the vehicle with
the newlyweds was traveling between 62 and 65 mph.

Parker's blood alcohol content was 0.197 percent when a blood
test was done following the crash, Leyton said.

The 11-year-old suffered serious injuries to his back and
pelvis and his jaw was fractured and required to be wired, Leyton said.

"Drunk driving is a serious crime and this is a harsh
example of just how serious it can be," Leyton said. "A man lost his bride and
a boy lost his mother."

Robert W. Larin, Parker's attorney, from Bloomfield Hills,
said Parker has cooperated with police.

"The family feels very badly and has expressed their
condolences to the family through the police department," he said.

Carrie Collins, Bryan Bailey-Collins' mother, said her son is in South Carolina with her and their family, although he will now travel back to
Michigan.

Bryan and Mariah Bailey-Collins were preparing to move
to Florida where they had purchased a home, she said.

"He doesn't know which way to go from here, because he's in
limbo," she said. "He doesn't have anybody in Michigan."

Carrie Collins said the situation is tough for both families.

"I feel really bad that the kid ruined his life," she said.
"I couldn't imagine it being one of my kids."

Bryan Bailey-Collins is in the process of becoming the legal guardian for
the 11-year-old, she said.

"For Bryan to go through this when he was behaving himself
is hard," she said. "He's a wreck."